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Sunday, 20 January 2013

Hundreds of demonstrators have protested in Dresden following
the sentence of an anti-Nazi demonstrator to nearly two years in jail
without the possibility of parole for aggravated assault and rioting,
the Sächische Zeitiung reported on Saturday.Tim H., a 36-year-old
Berliner and father of a two-year-old with no previous criminal record,
was sentenced on Wednesday to 22 months in jail for encouraging fellow
demonstrators at an anti-Nazi rally in February 2011 to break a police
barrier. His lawyer is appealing the sentence.

The Dresden judge ruled that because four policemen were injured as a result of that action, Tim H. is responsible. The Berliner Zeitung
reported that Tim H.’s crime was “using a megaphone” at a demonstration
in which 10,000 anti-Nazi protestors faced 3,000 neo-Nazis.

The district attorney admitted that Tim H. did not throw anything at the
police and did not hit or otherwise injure any police officers. He was
held responsible for the injuries because, in his view, Tim H. provoked
the attacks by inciting the crowd via megaphone.

Sven Richwin, Tim H’s attorney, said the words “go forward, go forward”
could be heard on the police video and there were no calls for violence.

Richwin doubts that his client can even be seen on the police video and
the prosecutor’s main witness exonerated Tim H. Witnesses who viewed the
demonstration from their balcony said Tim H. was not the person they
saw behind the megaphone.

Additionally four police witnesses could not identify Tim H. Richwin expects to win the case on appeal.

Nearly 500 demonstrators heeded the call from the organization
“Nazi-Free Dresden” to protest the ruling in downtown Dresden. They
yelled “We are all Tim” and protest speakers blasted the Dresden court,
saying the ruling was a farce. Anti-fascist protestors are criminalized
in Dresden, speakers told the crowd.

Top politicians from the centre-left Social Democratic Party, the Greens
and the socialist Left party also condemned the sentence. Katja
Kipping, the head of The Left, said the ruling was designed to scare
others away. “I’m ashamed of this,” the Dresden-born politician said.

Well-known Greens MP Hans-Christian Ströbele said the ruling would not
deter him from demonstrating in Dresden again. Former parliamentary
(Bundestag) president Wolfgang Thierse called Dresden justice “peculiar”
and labeled the ruling “strange.”